First of all prohibition means, the act of prohibiting or the condition of being prohibited, or al law, order, or decree that forbids something. Prohibition in the 1920s was when alcohol sale, transportation, manufacturing, and possession were forbidden in the United States. The goals of prohibition were to, 1 reduce the consumption of alcohol, 2 reduce crime, corruption, poverty, death rates, solve social problems, reduce the tax burden created by prison and poor houses and improve health and hygiene in America. 3 improve the economy and the quality of life.

Prohibition did not achieve it goals instead it added to the problem it was intended to solve. The problem with prohibition was that it was unenforceable, increased the amount of alcohol consumption (desired and sold), and it also caused the explosive growth of crime.

On January 16, 1920, one of the personal habits and customs of most American suddenly came to halt.

Prescription form for medicinal liquor

Carrie Nation in Ann Arbor, May 3, 1902 --- the mo...

Masked criminal at the grave of John Barleycorn cp...

The eighteenth amendment was put into effect and all importing, exporting, transporting, selling, and manufacturing of intoxicating liquor were put to an end. Shortly following the enactment of the eighteenth amendment, the national prohibition act, or the Volstead act as it was called because of its author, Andrew J.Volstead, was put into effect. This determined intoxicating liquor as anything having an alcoholic content of anything more than 0.5 percent, omitting alcohol used for medicinal and sacramental purposes.

The prohibitionist hoped that the Volstead act would decrease drunkenness in America and thereby decrease the crime rate, especially in large cities. This, however was undoubtedly to no avail. Although towards the beginning of prohibition this purpose seemed to be accomplished, the crime rate son skyrocketed to nearly twice that of the pre-prohibition period. In large cities the homicide went from 5.6 (per 100,000...

... of beer in l978 (Grogan 65). He died of alcohol poisoning and exposure to the freezing condtions of that winter night (Newer 47). Chuck's story is not a rare case of fun gone wrong. Shockingly, between l984 and l994, 23 people died in hazing-related incidents here in the United States ...

... the use and domestic production of marijuana, much like it did in 1920-1933 with alcohol. It is now used by over twenty-five million people annually (alternet.org). Many high school students can make a few phone calls at eight in the ...

... in the beverage form and sold legally in this state to persons over 21. Alcohol is absorbed directly into the bloodstream through the stomach and small intestine. It is distributed by the blood throughout the body, affecting literally every organ it touches in a matter of minutes. Enzymes in the ...

... of alcohol ingested in a short period of time can cause alcohol poisoning. Teens who use alcohol can become psychologically dependent upon it to feel good, deal with life, or handle stress. Their bodies may demand more and more to achieve the same kind of high experienced in the ...

17 pages290May/20034.3

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